Retrato do autor

Elizabeth Bisland (1861–1929)

Autor(a) de The Race Around the World

11+ Works 65 Membros 4 Críticas

About the Author

Includes the name: Elizabeth Bisland Wetmore

Obras por Elizabeth Bisland

Associated Works

Library of Southern Literature, Vol. XIII: Washington-Young (1909) — Contribuidor — 6 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Outros nomes
Wetmore, Elizabeth Bisland
Dane, B.L.R. (pseudonym)
Data de nascimento
1861-02-11
Data de falecimento
1929-01-06
Localização do túmulo
Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, New York, USA
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
USA
Local de nascimento
Louisiana, USA
Local de falecimento
Charlottesville, Virginia, USA
Locais de residência
Long Island, New York, USA
Natchez, Louisiana, USA
New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
New York, New York, USA
Ocupações
journalist
biographer
travel writer
Relações
Bly, Nellie (competitor)
Hearn, Lafcadio (friend)
Organizações
Cosmopolitan

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Elizabeth Bisland was born on a plantation in St. Mary Parish, Louisiana. During the Civil War, her family had to flee their home, and life was difficult when they returned. When Elizabeth was 12, they moved to her father's family home, which he had inherited, in Natchez, Louisiana. She began writing as a child, and as a teenager sent poetry to the New Orleans Times Democrat under a pseudonym. After her authorship was revealed to the editor, she went to New Orleans to work for the paper. Around 1887, Elizabeth moved to New York City and got a job writing for The Sun newspaper. Two years later, she was writing for a number of publications. She become the books editor at Cosmopolitan magazine and contributed to the Atlantic Monthly and the North American Review. Although she was a serious writer, she may be best known to history for a publicity stunt. Representing Cosmopolitan, she engaged in a race around the world with Nellie Bly, the investigative reporter for The New York World, in an attempt to beat the record of the fictional Phileas Fogg, hero of the Jules Verne novel Around the World in Eighty Days (1873). It was a great adventure for two female journalists at a time when nearly all were confined to the "society" or "women's pages" -- if hired at all -- and women could not easily travel alone even near home. The trip was dreamed up by Nellie Bly to boost her paper's circulation; the editor of Cosmopolitan read about it on the day she left New York, and quickly summoned the shy, genteel Elizabeth to challenge her. Despite her protests, Elizabeth found herself leaving that evening, going west as Nellie went east. They crossed paths in the South China Sea around Christmas 1889. Elizabeth arrived home in New York on January 30, 1890, four days after Nellie. She wrote a series of articles for Cosmopolitan on her trip, later published as In Seven Stages: A Flying Trip Around the World (1891). In 1891, she married Charles Whitman Wetmore, a wealthy attorney who later became a utilities tycoon, but continued to write articles under her maiden name. She became the biographer of Lafcadio Hearn, whom she knew from New Orleans, publishing The Life and Letters of Lafcadio Hearn (1906) to critical acclaim. Her last book, Three Wise Men of the East (1930), was published posthumously.

Membros

Críticas

This Lakeside Press edition has taken the stories of two intrepid 19th century lady journalists and woven them together. In a real life effort to emulate Verne's Around the World in 80 Days, Bisland and Bly were sent by their newspapers around the world in opposite directions, one going east and one going west. They reported back on their observations and adventures to an enthralled public. Bly had proposed the idea to her editor a year before and thought it had been dropped. Unbeknownst to her, the machinations of the competitive journalism world were working in the background to turn it into a competition. She had no notion that she was racing against Bisland until she had already reached Hong Kong and was warned that she was behind and going to lose the race. As Bly is remembered and Bisland is not, you can guess how the race ended. Their observations are particularly astute. The casual racism, poverty and excess they noted shows how much the world has changed and how much it hasn't.… (mais)
 
Assinalado
varielle | Jul 25, 2016 |
Discovered this journal after reading about her race around the world. The entries encompass many topics, most thought provoking. While she writes about her experienes, many of her musings are currently (and probably always will be) relevant. Even when I disagree with her, she makes her point beautifully. It's a shame this collection is out of print (and that the copy I found has so many errors/omissions!). "I am sorry for the poeople who don't care for flowers. The amiability they always awake in me is one of my most valued bits of secret property. Most of my life I have been poor, as the world reckons poverty, but in reality I have owned more than many millionaires."… (mais)
 
Assinalado
dandelionroots | May 17, 2013 |
So after reading Nellie Bly's Around the World in Seventy-Two Days, I discovered that a rival newspaper had sent their own female reporter, Elizabeth Bisland, on the same journey, with the resulting book: In Seven Stages: A Flying Trip Around the World. (Full text found online rel="nofollow" target="_top">here.)

[And I'll eventually get around to reading this.]… (mais)
 
Assinalado
bookishbat | Sep 25, 2013 |
The Times Literary Supplement article about the books Friday 15 February 1907 laid in. ExLib.
 
Assinalado
kitchengardenbooks | Sep 9, 2019 |

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Associated Authors

Estatísticas

Obras
11
Also by
1
Membros
65
Popularidade
#261,994
Avaliação
4.1
Críticas
4
ISBN
11

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